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Contribution of ABL kinase domain mutations to imatinib resistance in different subsets of Philadelphia-positive patients: by the GIMEMA Working Party on Chronic Myeloid Leukemia

Authors :
SOVERINI, SIMONA
COLAROSSI, SABRINA
GNANI, ALESSANDRA
ROSTI, GIANANTONIO
CASTAGNETTI, FAUSTO
POERIO, ANGELA
IACOBUCCI, ILARIA
AMABILE, MARILINA
BACCARANI, MICHELE
MARTINELLI, GIOVANNI
Abruzzese E
Orlandi E
Radaelli F
Ciccone F
Tiribelli M
di Lorenzo R
Caracciolo C
Izzo B
Pane F
Saglio G
on behalf of the GIMEMA Working Party on Chronic Myeloid Leukemia
Soverini, S
Colarossi, S
Gnani, A
Rosti, G
Castagnetti, F
Poerio, A
Iacobucci, I
Amabile, M
Abruzzese, E
Orlandi, E
Radaelli, F
Ciccone, F
Tiribelli, M
DI LORENZO, R
Caracciolo, C
Izzo, Barbara
Pane, Fabrizio
Saglio, G
Baccarani, M
Martinelli, G.
Soverini S
Colarossi S
Gnani A
Rosti G
Castagnetti F
Poerio A
Iacobucci I
Amabile M
Abruzzese E
Orlandi E
Radaelli F
Ciccone F
Tiribelli M
di Lorenzo R
Caracciolo C
Izzo B
Pane F
Saglio G
Baccarani M
Martinelli G
on behalf of the GIMEMA Working Party on Chronic Myeloid Leukemia (GIMEMA-CML)
Publication Year :
2007

Abstract

Purpose: ABL kinase domain mutations have been implicated in the resistance to the BCR-ABL inhibitor imatinib mesylate of Philadelphia-positive (Ph+) leukemia patients. Experimental Design: Using denaturing high-performance liquid chromatography and sequencing, we screened for ABL kinase domain mutations in 370 Ph+ patients with evidence of hematologic or cytogenetic resistance to imatinib. Results: Mutations were found in 127 of 297 (43%) evaluable patients. Mutations were found in 27% of chronic-phase patients (14% treated with imatinib frontline; 31% treated with imatinib post-IFN failure), 52% of accelerated-phase patients, 75% of myeloid blast crisis patients, and 83% of lymphoid blast crisis/Ph+ acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) patients. Mutations were associated in 30% of patients with primary resistance (44% hematologic and 28% cytogenetic) and in 57% of patients with acquired resistance (23% patients who lost cytogenetic response; 55% patients who lost hematologic response; and 87% patients who progressed to accelerated phase/blast crisis). P-loop and T315I mutations were particularly frequent in advanced-phase chronic myeloid leukemia and Ph+ ALL patients, and often accompanied progression from chronic phase to accelerated phase/blast crisis. Conclusions: We conclude that (a) amino acid substitutions at seven residues (M244V, G250E, Y253F/H, E255K/V, T315I, M351T, and F359V) account for 85% of all resistance-associated mutations; (b) the search for mutations is important both in case of imatinib failure and in case of loss of response at the hematologic or cytogenetic level; (c) advanced-phase chronic myeloid leukemia and Ph+ ALL patients have a higher likelihood of developing imatinib-resistant mutations; and (d) the presence of either P-loop or T315I mutations in imatinib-treated patients should warn the clinician to reconsider the therapeutic strategy.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a6ca62e5cfbf4dcb7dfb32271a214cf7